Jump to content

Near Eastern Archaeology (journal)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Near Eastern Archaeology
LanguageEnglish
Edited byThomas Schneider (University of British Columbia)
Publication details
Former name(s)
The Biblical Archaeologist
History1938–present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Near East. Archaeol.
Indexing
ISSN2325-5404 (print)
1094-2076 (web)
OCLC no.45566167
Links

Near Eastern Archaeology is an American journal covering art, archaeology, history, anthropology, literature, philology, and epigraphy of the Near Eastern and Mediterranean worlds from the Palaeolithic through Ottoman periods. The journal is written for a general audience and is published quarterly by the American Schools of Oriental Research. The current editor is Thomas Schneider. Almost all articles undergo peer review prior to publication. The journal is electronically archived by JSTOR with a three-year moving wall.

The Biblical Archaeologist (1938-1997)

[edit]

The journal was established in 1938 by archaeologist George Ernest Wright as The Biblical Archaeologist, out of "the need for a readable, non-technical, yet thoroughly reliable account of archaeological discoveries as they are related to the Bible...".[1]

In 1998 it was renamed Near Eastern Archaeology, to reflect the publication's broader geographic, chronological, and intellectual scope.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ 1938 "Announcement, " The Biblical Archaeologist, p. 4
[edit]